Leer, hablar y escribir de manera efectiva en contextos académicos: consejos de Armadillo Lab opara las ciencias e ingeniería

EXERCISE 2.1 The text below continues the explanation above. Apply strategies 1, 2, 3 for every paragraph. As you underline, write notes on the right using your own words as much as possible. Follow the example given to create your notes. (Notes: Facts + Your own comments in parenthesis). (adjective) something that appears to be one thing but is in fact very different. Source: Ryden, Barbara (2003). Fundamental Observations. In Introduction to Cosmology (pp. 6-25). The underlined parts tell us that 1) some modern cosmology observations are very complex; 2) other observations (the one coming next) seem simple, but they are not. Deceptive THE NIGHT SKY IS DARK Step outside on a clear, moonless night, far from city lights, and look upward. You will see a dark sky, with roughly two thousand stars scattered across it. The fact that the night sky is dark at visible wavelengths, instead of being uniformly bright with starlight, is known as Olbers’ Paradox, after the astronomer Heinrich Olbers, who wrote a scientific paper on the subject in 1826. As it happens, Olbers was not the first person to think about Olbers’ Paradox. As early as 1576, Thomas Digges mentioned how strange it is that the night sky is dark, with only a few pinpoints of light to mark the location of stars. Why should it be paradoxical that the night sky is dark? Most of us simply take for granted the fact that daytime is bright and night time is dark. The darkness of the night sky certainly posed no problems to the ancient Egyptians or Greeks, to whom stars were points of light stuck to a dome or sphere. However, the cosmological model of Copernicus required that the distance to stars be very much larger than an astronomical unit; otherwise, the parallax of the stars as the Earth goes around its orbit, would be large enough to see with the naked eye. Moreover, since the Copernican system no longer requires that the stars be attached to a rotating celestial sphere, the stars can be at different distances from the Sun. These liberating realizations led. Thomas Digges, and other post-Copernican astronomers, to embrace a model in which stars are large glowing spheres, like the Sun, scattered throughout infinite space. The paragraph starts by setting the scene right before introducing key concept: Olbers’ Paradox. It gives an older example of a scientist who noticed the paradox. (maybe not so important? Next paragraph will probably explain how the paradox works). 168 Some of the observations on which modern cosmology is based are highly complex, requiring elaborate apparatus and sophisticated data analysis . However, other observations are surprisingly simple. Let’s start with an observation that is deceptive in its extreme simplicity.

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